PARIS,
November 10 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - France's representative
on the body charting the European Union's future stepped into the row
over Turkey's bid for EU membership on Sunday, November 10, saying the
bloc was not a "Christian club" and Ankara should be judged on
the same criteria as any other candidate. Meanwhile, Greece said that EU
rejection of Turkey would be a serious error.
"Europe
is not a Christian club and it should not have hidden criteria,"
former Europe minister Pierre Moscovici told a Jewish radio, reported
Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.
Moscovici
was speaking two days after Valery Giscard d'Estaing, the French former
president who chairs the Convention on the Future of Europe, sparked
controversy by rejecting the idea of Turkish membership as the "end
of the European Union".
Moscovici
said Giscard d'Estaing's comments were a "completely
legitimate" expression of his views but insisted that "in the
enlarged Europe we are building, a Europe of 500 million people, there
are and there will be Muslims who have a place there."
The
EU "has already given its word and must keep its word", he
said, adding that Turkey's Justice and Development party (AKP), which
has its roots in a banned Islamic party, should be "judged by its
actions" after its landslide election victory last week.
Giscard
d'Estaing, who is drafting an EU constitution, had alluded to Turkey's
Muslim population, saying that the country had a "different
culture" and a high birth rate that would make it potentially the
EU's largest country, AFP said.
His
comments provoked anger among Turkish and EU officials, with the
outgoing Turkish government calling immediately for his resignation.
Next
month's EU summit in Copenhagen is due to decide whether or not to set a
date for membership negotiations with Turkey, which is pushing for talks
to start in 2003.
Meanwhile
in Athens, Greek Foreign Minister George Papandreou said at the weekend
that the European Union would be making a "serious error" if
it closed off the prospect of EU membership for Turkey.
"The
possibility of the adhesion of Turkey is a big challenge for Europe, and
it would be a serious error if the great European experience is stopped
geographically at the Balkans," Papandreou was quoted as saying
Saturday, November 9, by the Greek news agency ANA.
The
Greek foreign minister said he disagreed with Giscard d'Estaing, the
head of the Brussels-based convention on the future structure of the EU.
Papandreou
said Turkey's membership in the EU was of "vital importance"
for Greece.
He
described Athens support for the membership of Turkey and Balkan
countries as natural, as Germany supports the entry of Poland, the Czech
Republic and the Baltic states.
In
Ankara, meanwhile, Turkish poll winner Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed to
follow the path of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk as the nation commemorated its
secularist father on Sunday.
The
president and the powerful army, the self-declared guardian of
secularism, took the opportunity to declare that fundamentalism would
not be tolerated.
"Our
robust adherence to Ataturk and his principles will always guide us in
building a modern Turkey," Erdogan said in a statement to mark the
64th anniversary of Ataturk's death.
"I
wish to emphasize our determination to carry further with all its
elements the heritage the Great Leader has left," the Justice and
Development Party (AKP) chairman said in the statement, carried by
Anatolia news agency.
The
principles of Ataturk, who built modern Turkey on the ashes of the
Ottoman empire in 1923, are synonymous here with secularism and
pro-Western orientation.
Erdogan
participated in ceremonies at Ataturk's mausoleum in Ankara along with
other political leaders and the top army brass.
President
Ahmet Necdet Sezer said at the ceremonies that "all movements aimed
at destroying the secular and democratic republic and the modern gains
of the nation will be resisted with determination."
His
remarks mirrored a message by the military.
"The
Turkish armed forces are determined to protect the republic against all
threats, primarily reactionary and separatist movements," said an
army statement on Friday